Asked by tt
Which dialogue is properly formatted for a play?(1 point)
Responses
Like under your bed. Or in a closet.
“Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”
Like under your bed. Or in a closet. “Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”
OLIVIA: “Like under your bed.”
RYAN: “Or in a closet.”
STEPHEN: “Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”
OLIVIA: “Like under your bed.” RYAN: “Or in a closet.” STEPHEN: “Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”
OLIVIA: Like under your bed.
RYAN: Or in a closet.
STEPHEN: Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?
OLIVIA: Like under your bed. RYAN: Or in a closet. STEPHEN: Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?
Olivia said, “Like under your bed.”
“Or in a closet,” Ryan offered.
Stephen added, “Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?”
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
OLIVIA: Like under your bed.
RYAN: Or in a closet.
STEPHEN: Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?
This is the proper play format: character name + colon, then the spoken line (no narrative tags or quotation marks).
RYAN: Or in a closet.
STEPHEN: Oh, Mitch, aren’t you embarrassed that you hate storms when Storm is your own last name?
This is the proper play format: character name + colon, then the spoken line (no narrative tags or quotation marks).
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